The Indians are in the midst of an 11-game losing streak in a season that rapidly fell apart after the All-Star break. The slide has prompted fans - and the front office - to start talking about firing manager Manny Acta.

It's a trend that's common in Cleveland's pro sports scene. WKSU commentator Terry Pluto talks to Amanda Rabinowitz about why Cleveland fans are so quick to fire the coach.

Longest career of current Cleveland coachesManny Acta has been the Indians team manager for two and a half years—the longest career of the current managers and coaches of Cleveland’s three sports teams. And already, the city is ready for something new.

“It’s like, basically, ‘The Indians are terrible, we’re tired of this guy already,’” Pluto says. “Because in this town, when you don’t know what to do, they want someone fired.”

Firing isn't always the answerPluto says the rotation of coaches doesn’t necessarily help the teams improve.

“You think it makes it better,” he says. “But in fact, if firing people made it better, the Browns would have been to the Super Bowl three times. They are the masters of firing people. Since they came back in 1999…no coach, no general manager, no team president has lasted more than four years.”

Confidence in ActaThe Indians office gave its vote of confidence to Acta, but Pluto says that doesn’t mean much.

“The only thing that’s good for Manny Acta is that his contract is guaranteed through 2013,” he says. “So even if they fire him tomorrow, he’s paid for the rest of this year and next year.”

Pluto says a viable next option is Sandy Alomar, current bench coach and former player for the Indians. He interviewed for two managerial jobs last year, but didn’t get them.

“Sandy’s a sharp guy. He’s going to manage sooner or later, whether he manages here or somewhere else,” Pluto says. “Now, the question is, do you pull the plug and just go to Sandy? It’d be popular with the fans, although managers don’t sell tickets…these are all the things I’m sure they’re talking about behind the scenes.”

Pluto says although most sports teams only keep coaches and managers around three to five years, stability breeds success. He points to the Pittsburgh Steelers, who have had only three coaches in 40 years. The Patriots and Yankees have had coaches with long careers as well.